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The series of short films has an all-dog cast (with human voiceovers) that recreates famous scenes from early musical films, particularly The Broadway Melody.The finale is a chorus line of dogs performing "Singin' in the Rain" spoofing Cliff Edwards's original version of the song in The Hollywood Revue of 1929.
From 1929 to 1931, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer produced a series of nine short comedy films called All Barkie Dogville Comedies, sometimes known as the "barkies" (in a parody of "talkies"). [1] The actors in these films were trained dogs , dressed up to parody the performers in contemporary films.
Luer taper, a standardized fitting system used for making leak-free connections between slightly conical syringe tips and needles; Tapered thread, a conical screw thread made of a helicoidal ridge wrapped around a cone; Machine taper, in machinery and engineering; Mark Taper Forum, a theatre in the Los Angeles Music Center
An Elizabethan collar, E collar, pet ruff or pet cone (sometimes humorously called a treat funnel, lamp-shade, radar dish, dog-saver, collar cone, or cone of shame) is a protective medical device worn by an animal, usually a cat or dog. Shaped like a truncated cone, its purpose is to prevent the animal from biting or licking at its body or ...
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"One Leg Too Few" is a comedy sketch written by Peter Cook and most famously performed by Cook and Dudley Moore. It is a classic example of comedy arising from an absurd situation which the participants take entirely seriously (comic irony), and a demonstration of the construction of a sketch in order to draw a laugh from the audience with almost every line.
Olde English performed live at the Chicago Sketch Comedy Festival (2005), [11] the San Francisco Sketchfest (2005–2007) [12] and the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival (2007). [ 13 ] Olde English's "Free NYC Rap", a rap music video protesting the restrictions for independent New York City filmmakers that were proposed in Fall 2007, was nominated for a ...
[1] [2] Hayman's version of the monologue reached over 2 million sales in the United States. [3] The success of the record led to cover versions recorded by performers such as Monroe Silver in 1914, Barney Bernard in March 1916 for Victor Records , and George Thompson, also in 1916, whose version was released on Edison Records . [ 4 ]